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5 Core Competencies of Digital Transformation You Can’t Ignore

Blog: Enterprise Decision Management Blog

Guest Post: Today’s blog is from Les Winograd, VP of Client Services at HS2Solutions. He is a featured speaker at our Automotive Mastermind event being held this week in Silicon Valley. Les works with companies such as Domino’s Pizza, Wilson and Zipcar on their digital transformation strategies and spoke to attendees about how this applies to the automotive industry.
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In today’s world of ever-accelerating innovation, nimble challengers spring up and disrupt businesses overnight. Keeping pace with the competition and ensuring long-term market relevance can be a daunting task. The one certain in a thick of uncertainty is that the decision to harness the power of digital to drive business results and ensure long-term market relevance is no longer a question of if, but a question of how.

Perhaps nowhere is the importance of Digital Transformation greater than the Auto Industry in general, and the car buying process in particular. Companies like Apple, Google, and Tesla are changing car buyers’ expectations of the car driving experience. Disruptors like Uber and Zipcar have reshaped the boundaries of the mobility business model and shifted the paradigm from vehicle ownership to vehicle access. As traditional auto finance lenders are stepping up their online game, along come Digital Consumer Lenders like Avant, Earnest, and SoFi to compete on alternative playing fields.

Another item to consider is the ubiquitous access to information which has irreversibly flipped the balance of power to the consumer in deal negotiations. The average car buyer spends 60% of their total purchase process online, 62% of which takes place on third-party sites (Cox Automotive, 2017 Car Buyer Journey Study, January 2017). The average vehicle purchaser makes just two visits to a dealership. While they’re at the dealership, 50% of all car shoppers with mobile devices use their smartphones (Google/TNS, Auto Shopper Study, 2015). The number one reason they’re using their phone is to confirm that they’re getting a good price (Millward Brown Digital and Polk, Automotive Shopper Path to Purchase, September 2015).

At its core, Digital Transformation is the strategic decision to embrace the power of digital technology as integral to the success of every aspect of the enterprise. It is about survival in today’s business world and is the key to long-term sustainable success as the pace of innovation continues to multiply. In order to achieve full Digital Transformation, an organization must be focused and aligned on five key elements: Vision, Organization, Customer, Insight, and Technology.

1) Vision – This element that points the company in a unified direction. Crafting an effective North Star vision statement is paramount to corporate success. A vision statement should be audacious, motivational, and leave no doubt as to what the company intends to become.

2) Organization – In order for vision to achieve desired business results, it needs to be integrated into every aspect of how the organization thinks and acts. Every individual in every department of the company must understand the vision and feel accountable for contributing to its attainment. This requires appropriate organizational structure, culture, processes, skills, and incentives. It requires everybody pulling in the same direction at all times.

3) Customer – That direction everyone moves in needs to be pointed toward the customer. “The Customer Comes First” isn’t just an overused, hollow slogan, it must be an innate part of the culture. All teams must understand their customer, embrace customer needs, and solve customer problems as the main driver to their work.

4) Insight – A thorough understanding of the company’s customers comes through work to gain insight. The digitally transformed organization has a culture and leadership style that relies on data, analytics, trend analysis, and customer research to drive decisions and investments instead of politics, gut feel, and personal opinions.

5) Technology – Obviously, Digital Transformation requires the right understanding, implementation, and commitment to technology, but there’s a reason this is mentioned last. Technology on its own is not a silver bullet. Knowing how to leverage technology as a key differentiator, instead of viewing it as a cost center is the final, and crucial, piece to the puzzle. This knowledge can only come from alignment with the other four elements of the model.

Every business, in every industry must fully embrace the reality that consumers have more choices than ever and that Digital Transformation is the key to winning in tomorrow’s marketplace. Customers will flock, and remain fiercely loyal, to brands that resonate with consistent, exceptional, transparent, and personalized experiences. They abandon brands that are inconvenient, cumbersome, time-consuming, and emotionless. Whether you’re a CEO, CMO, or CIO, the first question is, “where do I start?”

In order to answer that question, you need to know what your company’s current capabilities are within each of the five key elements of a successful Digital Transformation program. A Digital Capability Assessment can be done informally or formally to help you evaluate your organization’s maturity level along these five core competencies and provides the insight necessary to prioritize investments, shore up organizational proficiencies, capitalize on opportunities, and develop a detailed roadmap for your transformation journey.

Recent history is littered with examples of market leaders that failed to change with the times and are now afterthoughts in their industry. When’s the last time you thought about using a Polaroid camera, Encyclopedia Britannica, or a Yellow Pages phone book? Digital Transformation requires bold vision, organizational alignment, thorough customer awareness, data-driven insights, and superior application of technology in order to stand out in the rapidly evolving marketplace.

The next move is yours. Will you write the next chapter in your organization’s history, or become a footnote in tomorrow’s business journals?

The post 5 Core Competencies of Digital Transformation You Can’t Ignore appeared first on FICO.

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